Friday, January 31, 2025

Friday's parting shots

Photos by Stacie Joy 

Happy 10th anniversary to C&B Café owner Ali Sahin and his team at 178 E. Seventh St., between Avenue A and Avenue B.
C&B opened in January 2015, and they've been great neighbors ever since. They sponsored the tree lighting in Tompkins Square Park, provided kitchen space to the volunteers who went on to form EVLovesNY, fed unhoused neighbors, provided Thanksgiving meals at Graffiti Church, refilled the community fridge, and taught kids from the Amsterdam School how to make cookies for free. The list goes on.

'Kiss' them for me

 

Over the next few weeks, we'll highlight indie acts performing at this year's New Colossus Festival, which will take place in East Village and LES venues from March 4 to 9. 

Here's dark-wave Canadian artist Frankie Flowers with "Kiss Me Like the World Is Ending." 

Find Festival info here.

6 posts from January 2025

Photo on 2nd Avenue by Asha Schechter 

A mini month in review... 

• Taking a look at the all-new Baker Falls, now in soft-open mode on the Lower East Side (Jan. 22

• A visit with Anne DeVita (Jan. 22

• Why School for the Dogs abruptly closed in the East Village (Jan. 7)

• Reader report: Car crashes into Blink Fitness on Avenue A; driver flees (Jan. 6

• Tompkins Square Park upgrades: When will the field house and restrooms reopen? (Jan. 6

• When we found out about a mysterious early-morning transport on 2nd Avenue (Jan. 3)

A moment with Marianne Faithfull on St. Mark's Place in 1992


Marianne Faithfull with her longtime accompanist Barry Reynolds at Sin-é, the legendary music cafe at 122 St Mark's Place between Avenue A and First Avenue in June 1992. Photo by Allen Ginsberg. 

Faithfull died yesterday. She was 78.

Where does the East Village rate in the list of NYC's noisiest neighborhoods?

We're No. 7! We're No. 7! 

The New York Times did a deep dive on a favorite topic: Noise. 

Here's what a search of the city's 311 logs revealed:
Using 311, New Yorkers can file noise complaints and report violations of the noise code to the appropriate agencies. (Categories include loud neighbors, construction noise, street music, and “aircraft and boats.”) The 311 logs are publicly available via NYC Open Data and include location information, allowing us to determine which of New York City’s 59 community districts were the noisiest last year. In 2024, New Yorkers called in a total of 753,222 noise complaints. 
Incredibly, almost 10 percent of them came from residents of Bronx Community District 12, which encompasses several neighborhoods including Williamsbridge and Baychester.
Manhattan District 3, which includes the East Village, Lower East Side, Chinatown and Two Bridges, finished a distant seventh with 19,588 noise complaints via 311 last year.

Read the full piece at the Times here. 

This is a good time to revisit this June 2024 EVG post: What's the 311? How East Village residents can effectively file complaints.

Signage alert: Win Son Bakery on 2nd Avenue

Signage is up for Win Son Bakery at 23 Second Ave. between First Street and Second Street. (Thanks to the EVG reader for the pic!)

It has been almost a year since we first mentioned that the popular Taiwanese-American Win Son Bakery in East Williamsburg would open a place in this neighborhood. 

Like the Brooklyn outpost, the EV location will serve as a café, bakery and restaurant. 

The bakery opened in September 2019 at 164 Graham Ave. at Montrose Avenue, several years after the Win Son restaurant debuted. Many of its goods have been celebrated, like the mochi millet doughnuts. The New Yorker once called its Mortadella Pancake a perfect breakfast sandwich. You can check out the Win Son Bakery menu here

No word about an opening just yet. 

The previous tenant, the dance studio Exile Professional Gym (EXPG), never reopened after the March 2020 PAUSE.

After 10 years on 1st Avenue, SenYa has closed

Photos by Steven 

A pizzeria is taking over the SenYa space at 109 First Ave. between Sixth Street and Seventh Street. 

There's now a rather generic-looking sign up on the gate of the former Japanese restaurant with the coming-soon info. 


On the topic of pizza... a few blocks to the south between Third and Fourth, we have a cheap-slice switcheroo, with Basilic Pizzeria taking over for the short-lived Halal Bites Pizza...

Thursday, January 30, 2025

Thursday's parting shot

An EV resident shared this photo today... when a juvenile red-tailed hawk paid a visit and got the cat's attention. 

H/T Steven!

The incoming Whole Foods Market Daily Shop shapes up in StuyTown

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

The transformation of the former Associated continues at 409 E. 14th St. between Avenue A and First Avenue. 

Workers told us progress is "going quickly" and the "next stage" should begin soon. (We don't know exactly what the next stage might entail.) 

As previously reported, Whole Foods Market is opening a smaller-format store, Whole Foods Market Daily Shop, in this space...
Last Fall, Beam Living shared the following email with StuyTown residents about what to expect: 
This store will be one of the first locations of the new Whole Foods Market Daily Shop — a recently announced quick-shop concept from the grocer. Whole Foods Market StuyTown will provide a convenient option for grab-and-go meals and snacks, weekly essentials, and the wide range of fresh, seasonal produce that Whole Foods Market is known and loved for. This location will also feature Juice & Java, which provides coffee, tea, fresh-pressed juices, smoothies, sandwiches, soups, and desserts. 
You can read this EVG post for more details. NYC's first Whole Foods Market Daily Shop opened at 1175 Third Ave. on the UES last fall

Associated closed here in December 2019. Joseph Falzon, the store's owner, previously said that a confluence of factors had cut business nearly in half. For starters, construction on 14th Street for the L train obscured the supermarket with a 12-foot fence for nearly two years.

Soda Club is moving from Avenue B to Avenue A

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

Soda Club is moving from 155 Avenue B near 10th Street to 95 Avenue A at Sixth Street. 

The Michelin Bib Gourmand-awarded vegan wine and pasta bar will take over the space that Amor y Amargo occupied until it relocated to its original home next door several weeks ago. 

Overthrow's Ravi DeRossi confirmed the move. 

"It's a super busy restaurant," he said of Soda Club, "and we're turning away a lot of people in the small space that we currently have on Avenue B."
Construction at No. 95 will commence ASAP... with an anticipated mid-March ready date. 

He said Overthrow will hold onto 155 Avenue B. 

"We have a few ideas, but nothing solid yet," DeRossi said. 

Soda Club debuted on Avenue B in the spring of 2021.

The T Mobile shop that always looked closed on 14th Street and 1st Avenue has closed

Photos by Steven

The T Mobile store has closed on the SE corner of 14th Street and First Avenue.

Door signage points patrons to the location several blocks to the west on 14th Street...
This wraps up 10 years at this spot... arriving in April 2015. The previous tenant, Pizza Bagel Cafe, abruptly shuttered in November 2014

Anyway, T Mobile often looked closed. We sometimes thought they didn't want to look too inviting for anyone to wander in. This has long been a troubled corridor, with many people staggering around like some kind of zombie apocalypse.

Some Downtown Funk and Junk coming to 9th Street

Reporting by Stacie Joy

A vintage clothing-jewelry story is coming to 333 E. Ninth St. between First Avenue and Second Avenue.

We don't know much about the new venture, Downtown Funk and Junk, but it sounds promising. 

This storefront was previously Yosei Nails. 

The new shop will be adjacent to vintage veterans Spark Pretty

The storefront to the west, the former Pride Smokes, is currently on the rental market. 

Wednesday, January 29, 2025

Wednesday's parting shot

Work by Vittorio MarellaIl nostro primo mare, 2024, oil on panel ... part of a group show at Spazio Amanita titled "Sonder" up now through Feb. 23. 

The gallery is at 313 Bowery between First Street and Second Street.

Fake O returns with a side of mayo at Katz's

Back in early December, we spotted film crews outside Katz's. Notices stated the project as Hellman's.

It turns out this was for a Hellman's mayonnaise Super Bowl ad that reunited Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal as characters from 1989's When Harry Met Sally, eating some too-puny-for-Katz's sandwiches. 

ICYMI the ad, which was in heavy rotation today... Sydney Sweeney also makes an appearance...

   

The spot will officially debut during Super Bowl LIX on Feb. 9 between the Commanders and Bills*.

* — yes, we know

The building that houses East Village institution John's of 12th Street is for sale

Image via LoopNet 

The five-story building at 302 E. 12th St., which includes the 117-year-old classic restaurant John's of 12th Street, is now on the sales market. 

Before delving into the details, the listing at Cushman & Wakefield notes that John's signed a 10-year lease extension in May 2022. 

To the listing:
The building features 8 residential units and 1 ground-floor retail unit. The residential units consist of 5 fair market and 3 rent-stabilized apartments, with 2 units per floor. Of these, all 5 fair market units, along with rent-stabilized Unit 2, are 2-bedroom, 1-bath units, while rent-stabilized Units 6 and 8 are large 1-bedroom, 1-bath units. The rear second-floor unit boasts a large private terrace. 
Recently, 7 of the 8 residential units, including all 5 fair market units and rent stabilized units 2 and 8, have undergone complete gut renovations, leaving the Property with no deferred maintenance. 
Owned by the same family for 40 years before its acquisition by an international investment group, the Property has since undergone a full renovation, completing the business plan and creating a turn-key, stabilized trophy investment opportunity for investors.
There are also 1,333 square feet of additional air rights available. The asking price is $9.25 million. 

Nick Sitnycky, who became a co-owner of John's with Mike Alpert in 1973, sold the classic red-sauce joint in 2016 to a long-time restaurant customer. 

Sitnysky, who grew up on Avenue B, owned the building until 2018. Public records show the property changing hands to an LLC with a Midtown address for $7.75 million.

Pink Olive is returning to the East Village

Image from 2023 via Instagram 

In August 2023, Grace Kang closed Pink Olive, her gift and stationery boutique on Ninth Street between Avenue A and First Avenue, after 16 years in business. 

She continued operating her outposts in the West Village and Cold Spring, N.Y. 

This week, Kang announced her return to the storefront at 439 E. Ninth St., where she first launched the business in 2007. 

Here's the message via Instagram:
After closing our beloved East Village store 18 months ago, I'm thrilled to announce… we're heading back to the East Village! EV was where it all began 18 years ago, and it holds such a special place in my heart. It's where I grew professionally as an entrepreneur, connected with some of the loveliest people who remain dear friends to this day, and everything in between. Everything I've been through has brought me full circle, back to where it all began, and I couldn’t be more grateful. This 2.0 version will be prettier, sparklier, and better than ever! Stay tuned for updates as this special journey unfolds.
The eastern storefront at No. 439 had remained vacant after her departure. 

You can read our Q&A with Kang from 2017 right here

H/T Bayou!

Tuesday, January 28, 2025

Films we want to see: 'Peter Hujar's Day'

The biopic of the late East Village-based artist-photographer Peter Hujar premiered at the Sundance Film Festival this week to rave reviews. 

The synopsis
A film adaptation of the book, "Peter Hujar's Day," by Linda Rosenkrantz starring Ben Whishaw and Rebecca Hall. It invites audiences into a single day in 1974 with groundbreaking queer photographer Peter Hujar. Set entirely in one room, the film re-creates the conversation between Hujar and Rosenkrantz, recorded on audio tape nearly fifty years ago and later published as a book. Through their freewheeling, intimate exchange, Hujar shares vivid stories of his interactions with literary and cultural icons like William Burroughs, Candy Darling, Susan Sontag and Allen Ginsberg, while also reflecting on the rhythms of everyday life in 1970s New York. 
To the blurbs! 

• "Whishaw and Hall play 1970s New York artists in a gorgeous monologue of a movie that becomes one you want to live inside." — IndieWire

• "Ben Whishaw and Rebecca Hall Take an Illuminating Snapshot of a Queer Artist in Ira Sachs’ Gorgeous Character Study." — The Hollywood Reporter 

• "Ben Whishaw Plays the Noted New York Photographer in Ira Sachs’ Magical 1974 Time Capsule of a Movie." — Variety 

• "Ben Whishaw and Rebecca Hall Are Breathtaking in Ira Sachs' Experimental Drama." — Collider 

No word about a distribution deal or release date yet. 

Hujar lived and worked above the Louis N. Jaffe Art Theater (today, the Village East by Angelika) on Second Avenue at 12th Street. Read more about the space where Jackie Curtis and David Wojnarowicz lived before and after Hujar right here

I highly recommend the book, "Peter Hujar's Day," which is a transcript of a conversation between Hujar and Rosenkrantz. Per the description: "Rosenkrantz asked Hujar to write down everything he did one day on Dec. 18, 1974."

Bought a copy at Mast on Fifth Street and Avenue A several years back.

Hujar died from AIDS-related pneumonia on Nov. 26, 1987. He was 53.

The former P.S. 64/Charas/El Bohio Community Center has a new project name

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy

Meet the Creative Community Collective — aka C3. 

The former P.S. 64/Charas/El Bohio Community Center on Ninth Street between Avenue B and Avenue C has a new project name.

That was the big reveal during last Thursday night's public informational session at the Grand Street Settlement on Pitt Street, which attracted nearly 125 local residents who wanted an update on the long-dormant East Village property.
Q Impact Solutions founder Quamid Francis (below) led Thursday's discussion and shared details about the rebranding.
Per the new project website:
C3 is more than a restoration project — it's a commitment to preserving the spirit of collaboration, creativity, and community service that has defined former P.S. 64 for over a century. The goal is to shape the building into a multi-use arts, educational, and community hub that remains publicly accessible while serving both the Lower East Side and the broader needs of New York City and beyond.

During this pre-construction phase, C3 serves as the platform through which we engage the community, invite feedback, and chart a path forward together.
There was a recap of the updates from the October public meeting with representatives from Beyer Blinder Belle Architects and Denham Wolf Real Estate, representing the landlord, said to be a private foundation. (This post has more about the reported owner.)

There was an update on the structural surveys and exterior condition reports: The building is stable, though with some loose masonry. A partial vacate order remains in place.

Denham Wolf's Jessica Stander spoke about the interior work, the year-round security team, lighting, safety measures, and removing dead — and living — animals living or trapped inside.

"We are now pigeon-free with a safe and stable site," she said.  

Meanwhile, the timeframe hasn't changed, per Denham Wolf's Paul Wolf, who discussed money for renovations and capital expenses. The project will cost over $100 million and take four to six years to complete. 

Afterward, Francis said he was pleased with the meeting (which was much less contentious than in October).

"Overall, it was a strong night. The community members asked thoughtful questions, which signals sustained deep interest — fantastic news. I'm also very pleased with the positive reactions to the project name, as it helps make it feel more 'real,'" he said. "There's clear momentum with fundraising opportunities; several attendees approached me afterward, offering to make introductions. I'm excited to dive into fundraising aggressively because this is such a compelling opportunity. Once we extend awareness beyond the community, I'm confident we'll generate even more support."

You can keep tabs on the C3 website for updates.
The building has sat in disrepair for decades. New ownership bought the property last January for $57.1 million.

Previously on EV Grieve

Tuesday's opening shots

Photos by Cecil Scheib 

A view to the west this morning, where the rising sun reflected off the windows...

Monday, January 27, 2025

L.A. Fire Relief shows continue at Berlin, the Bowery Electric and Heaven Can Wait

As previously noted...
The New York music scene is coming together to raise funds for the fallout caused by the devastating Los Angeles wildfires. Each night's ticket proceeds will go directly to mutual aid efforts providing resources, support, and relief to those affected by the fires. In addition to live music, there will be DJ sets, tattoos, raffles, and more. Any ticket purchased will be honored at all venues day of show, capacity allowing.
Shows continue tomorrow and Wednesday night at... 

• Berlin, 25 Avenue A 
Tickets for Tuesday night here... Wednesday night here 

• The Bowery Electric, 327 Bowery
Tickets for Tuesday night here... Wednesday night here 

• Heaven Can Wait, 169 Avenue A 
Tickets for Wednesday night here